
The concrete triangle stands out against the snow-covered landscape. The mountain’s silence is broken only by the comings and goings of tourists, who step out of their bus or taxi for a few minutes to photograph the mysterious structure. The small building, barely wider than its armored door, is neither a work of brutalist art nor a Hollywood movie set. It is the entrance to the global agricultural seed vault – the Svalbard Global Seed Vault – built in Norway’s Arctic archipelago, 1,300 kilometers from the North Pole. Often dubbed the “Noah’s Ark for plants,” it preserves millions of seeds in case of catastrophe.
“This place is one of the most important in the world,” said Espen Barth Eide, Norway’s foreign affairs minister. “If things go wrong, due to war, climate change, or a nuclear explosion, countries can come and retrieve their seeds and start from scratch.” At the end of May, the Norwegian politician and his British counterpart, David Lammy, came to deposit two precious sealed boxes containing, inside aluminum envelopes, seeds of peas, carrots, lettuce and cabbage.